Minnesota's Surprise Choice Still Working Out K-12 Details

Although he was admittedly fuzzy on the details of his plans for his
first months in office, Minnesota's governor-elect, former professional
wrestler Jesse "The Body" Ventura, has assured the state's education
advocates that he is a friend of the public schools.

Mr. Ventura, who took 37 percent of the statewide vote last week to
win a stunning victory in a three-way race, has said that after working
to cut taxes, improving public education will be one of his top
priorities.

But first, the 47-year-old candidate of the Reform Party founded by
Ross Perot says he needs to bone up on the ABCs of governing.

"I feel like I'm Rodney Dangerfield," Mr. Ventura told local
reporters during a postelection press conference, referring to the
comedian who jokes about getting no respect. "It's time to go back to
school."

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State education groups say they are just beginning to feel their way
with a governor-elect whose win caught nearly everyone--including Mr.
Ventura--off-guard. Fresh from a populist-style campaign in which he
stayed away from specifics, saying he didn't want to make promises he
couldn't keep, Mr. Ventura must assemble a transition team, an
administration, and sketch plans for a budget proposal.

Mr. Ventura--who now says he wants to change his nickname from "The
Body" to "The Mind"--placed "a lot of emphasis on just getting
elected," said Richard J. Anderson, the executive director of the
Minnesota School Boards Association. "I think probably the
governor-elect is just starting to think about the meaning of governing
in the state of Minnesota."

Throughout their shoestring campaign, Mr. Ventura and running mate
Mae Schunk, a 36-year veteran teacher and administrator now working as
a teacher of gifted and talented students at St. Paul's public Phalen
Lake Elementary School, have opposed vouchers and backed local control
of schools.

Mr. Ventura, who attended the Minneapolis public schools and whose
two teenage children now attend public schools in a suburban
Minneapolis district, has said that he plans to defer to Ms. Schunk's
expertise on such education-related matters as selecting a new
education commissioner. A former Navy Seal and Vietnam veteran, Mr.
Ventura also served as mayor of Brooklyn Park, a city of 65,000 outside
of Minneapolis, from 1991 to 1994. He is currently a radio talk show
host.

With a Republican majority in the state House, and a Democratic
majority in the Minnesota Senate, it is still unclear where Mr. Ventura
will cultivate legislative support for any forthcoming proposals, Mr.
Anderson said.

In an education platform released on the Internet before Election
Day, Mr. Ventura outlined a plan to reduce class sizes without raising
taxes. Through closer monitoring of school budgets and stricter
enforcement of the state's current law on class-size reduction, Mr.
Ventura said "every public school in Minnesota will have a 17-1
student-teacher ratio (or better) in grades K-6."

But while those intentions may be admirable, the complexity of the
state's school funding system would make such a plan difficult, said
Judy E. Schaubach, a co-president of Education Minnesota, the union
recently formed by the merger of the state's National Education
Association and American Federation of Teachers affiliates. Even so,
Mr. Ventura's election is not a "gloom and doom scenario," Ms.
Schaubach said.

Unlike outgoing Republican Gov. Arne Carlson, who supported school
vouchers, and the GOP candidate, Mayor Norm Coleman of St. Paul, who
finished second, Mr. Ventura is clearly behind public education, Ms.
Schaubach said. "As bizarre as it is, at least he has the same basic
values" as teachers' union members, Ms. Schaubach said. "He does
believe in public education, without a doubt."

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